Member Biography

Harold "Red" Grange was the miracle man of the 1920s,
picked for the all-century team, named the Galloping Ghost
because no one could catch him. He was fast, elusive,
football's greatest open-field runner up to his time. Here are
some dates: October 6, 1923, the Galloping Ghost makes his
debut for Illinois against Nebraska with touchdown runs of 50,
35, 12 yards. October 18, 1924, he scores four touchdowns
in the first 12 minutes against Michigan on runs of 95, 67, 56,
44 yards. For the day he carries the ball 21 times for 402
yards. November 8, 1924 he runs for 300 yards, passes for
177 against Chicago. October 31, 1925, Grange runs 36
times, gains 363 yards and has two 65-yard touchdowns
against Pennsylvania. He played only 20 games in college but
had 31 touchdowns and 3,362 yards. Grange was born June
13, 1903. Over his career - high school at Wheaton, Illinois;
college at Illinois, pro with the Chicago Bears, he carried the
ball 4,103 times, gained 33,920 yards, an average of 8.4 per
try. He died January 28, 1991.